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Query: UMLS:C0022104 (irritable bowel syndrome)
8,033 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The study of the psychologic profile of patients with the irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) has shown that psychologic aggression, personality abnormalities, psychiatric diagnostics and pathologic behaviour patterns are more frequently encountered than in normal subjects or those with other disease. Moreover, patients with IBS often relate psychological events experienced in infancy such as a lost child, divorce of parents, or sexual abuse which can affect their future and particularly their manner of seeking medical advice. As it is known that only between 23 and 38 per cent of patients with IBS seek medical advice, it is also important to know whether these psychologic characteristics are true for all subjects with these symptoms or if they are found in a particular subgroup of patients who seek medical advice because, in fact, they are really ill. Multivariate analysis was used to evaluate the medical and psychologic status of 72 patients with IBS, 82 patients with symptoms suggestive of IBS but who did not seek medical advice, and 84 normal subjects. With regard to semeiologic differences according to whether patients sought medical advice or not, there were more subjects in the first group who complained of diarrhea and pain. Moreover, there were more patients with personality abnormalities, pathologic behaviour patterns, and a lower sensitivity to stress in subjects with IBS seeking medical advice than in those with symptoms who did not seek advice (p less than 0.001) or normal subjects (p less than 0.001). There were no significant differences between the subjects with symptoms but who do not seek medical advice and the normal subjects (p = 0.21).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Personality and psychological factors in the irritable bowel syndrome]. 221 Jan 85

In the adult, the irritable bowel syndrome is characterized by intestinal transit disorders associated or not with chronic abdominal pain. Two different forms can be seen: in one, pain and constipation are predominant, while in the other, pain and diarrhea alternate. The second form is encountered with predilection in the child. Various terms can be used to name the syndrome including colitis, non specific or benign colitis, irritable bowel syndrome in the child, infantile diarrhea, and others, all of which attests to our ignorance of the pathophysiology of this disorder. This syndrome is by far the most frequent cause of chronic or recurrent diarrhea in the child. Before the age of 3 or 4 years, the principal syndrome is diarrhea, which usually appears before the age of 6 months. Onset is generally brutal, as in acute enteritis or an extradigestive infection (ENT...) but persists, or else, more often, the syndrome appears insidiously over several days. The child has soft or liquid stools of fetid odor in most cases, very rarely sourish, inhomogeneous and in which intact aliments can be found. Stools are often associated with mucous discharge, rarely with blood, and do not contain any pus. Stools are not fatty but occasionally they are sticky and adhere to the pot. During the day, stools change from well formed in the morning to soft in the evening. Their frequency varies from one day to another as well as during a given 24 hour period, ranging from one or two to 10 per day.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Irritable bowel syndrome in children]. 221 Jan 87

Based on recent epidemiologic studies of functional intestinal disorders, we have attempted to answer the following two questions: a) what is the prevalence of functional intestinal disorder in the Western world, b) are there epidemiologic variations in the different modes of symptomatic presentation of functional intestinal disorders? The overall prevalence of functional intestinal disorders in the Western world ranges between 17 and 23 percent according to the country considered, and is between 14 and 18 percent for the irritable bowel syndrome and 4 to 8 percent for painless constipation. The "irritable intestine" group is characterized by a sex ratio of close to one, a median age near 40, a strong influence of stress on symptoms, and the frequency of complaints such as nausea, vomiting, migraine, and pyrosis. The syndrome is seen in active subjects, who believe that they are "sick", and as such, seek medical advice often. Anxiety and depression are frequently encountered. Patients are often athletes, smokers, and have diarrhea. On the other hand, "painless constipation" is characterized by a high prevalence of women and age over 50. Often these subjects do not have any active professional activity. Stress-related and extradigestive symptoms are rare. They do not consider themselves "sick" and do not seek medical advice very often. Conversely, they use laxatives frequently. Individualization of epidemiologically different groups suggests that the pathophysiology may differ between the two groups and perhaps that there are specific therapeutic and diagnostic approaches accordingly.
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PMID:[Epidemiology of the irritable bowel syndrome]. 221 Jan 92

Nineteen of 27 patients suffering from Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS) who had completed a multicomponent treatment involving progressive muscle relaxation, thermal biofeedback, cognitive therapy and IBS education were located and evaluated 4 yr posttreatment. Seventeen of 19 (89.5, or 63% of the total original sample) rated themselves as more than 50% improved. Six of the 12 patients (50%) who submitted symptom monitoring diaries met our criteria for clinical improvement, i.e. achieving at least a 50% reduction in primary IBS symptom scores. The means on all measures at long-term follow-up were lower than those obtained prior to treatment. When follow-up symptom means were compared with pretreatment means, significant (P less than 0.05) reductions were obtained on abdominal pain/tenderness, diarrhea, nausea, and flatulence.
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PMID:Behaviorally treated irritable bowel syndrome patients: a four-year follow-up. 222 90

Details of physical symptoms, psychological and social dysfunction of 42 outpatients diagnosed as having irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) were collected by interview and questionnaire. Social stresses and problems were also elicited as well as the impact of symptoms on their subjects' daily lives. High proportions of subjects were handicapped in their social, sexual and working lives by IBS symptoms and social stresses and problems were common. Forty-eight per cent were classified as having a 'minor psychiatric illness' using the Clinical Psychiatric Interview. Women were more severely affected by physical symptoms (with the exception of diarrhoea) and were more likely to be in pain longer and for more days in the month. They were also more likely than men to be diagnosed as having a psychiatric illness.
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PMID:Physical symptom severity, psychological and social dysfunction in a series of outpatients with irritable bowel syndrome. 223 81

Diarrhea is one manifestation of GI disturbance. Symptoms may be acute if caused by such things as infections, drug reactions, alterations in diet, heavy metal poisoning, or fecal impaction. Chronic diarrhea is a symptom of GI diseases such as irritable bowel syndrome, lactase deficiency, cancer of the colon, inflammatory bowel disease, and malabsorption diseases. Chronic diarrhea may also be associated with GI surgery, radiation therapy, laxative abuse, alcohol abuse, and chemotherapeutic agents. When interventions are required to deal with diarrhea, they may include such things as alteration in tube feeding products and methods of administration, fluid replacement by oral rehydration procedures, a rapid return to feeding, and education aimed at the health information clients need to prevent or control the symptom of diarrhea.
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PMID:Diarrhea. 223 42

The determination of hydrogen in exhaled air by gas chromatography was used for investigation of patients with relapsing diarrhea of various genesis. An increased H level on an empty stomach, regarded as a sign of bacterial growth in the intestine, was detected in 45% of examines, mainly in celiac disease immunodeficiency, intestinal tuberculosis, diverticulosis, diabetic enteropathy, and erosive duodenitis. An increase in the H level in exhaled air after a lactose tolerance test (50 g of lactose) made it possible to diagnose lactose deficiency in 38% of patients with chronic relapsing diarrhea. In the irritable colon syndrome lactose deficiency was detected in 40% of patients.
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PMID:[Hydrogen test: its diagnostic possibilities in intestinal diseases]. 229 Mar 43

Ileal Na+-dependent bile acid transport was quantified in vitro as the uptake of 3H-taurocholate into brush-border membrane vesicles. Vesicles were prepared from ileal biopsies of 158 patients placed in 10 diagnostic categories. Active bile acid transport (expressed as picomoles taurocholate uptake per milligram brush-border membrane protein per 15 s, median and interquartile ranges indicated) did not differ significantly in 6 categories: irritable bowel syndrome (71, 35-97; n = 21), colon polyps (42, 30-89; n = 29), colitis (62, 33-91; n = 31), postvagotomy or postcholecystectomy (69, 37-97; n = 11), diarrhea without increased bile acid loss (58, 48-85; n = 12), and lack of gastrointestinal pathology (74, 45-103; n = 22). A decreased active bile acid transport was found in 3 categories: ileal disease (4, 1-36; n = 11), partial ileal resection (5, 1-35; n = 5), and constipation (41, 22-50; n = 8). Bile acid transport was increased in patients with bile acid-losing diarrhea with endoscopically and histologically normal ilea (111, 94-135; n = 8). These findings indicate that a low fecal bile acid loss, presumed to be present in constipated patients, is associated with a low Na+-dependent ileal bile acid transport and a high bile acid loss is associated with a high active bile acid transport. Ileal bile acid transport might be regulated by the availability of bile acids to the ileal enterocytes.
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PMID:Na+-dependent bile acid transport in the ileum: the balance between diarrhea and constipation. 229 90

A patient with isolated fructose malabsorption presented with diarrhoea and colic during the first year of life and subsequently responded to a fructose free diet. Fructose malabsorption has been implicated in some cases of irritable bowel syndrome in adults and may also be an infrequently recognised cause of gastrointestinal symptoms in children.
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PMID:Isolated fructose malabsorption. 231 71

Continuous 72-h recordings of duodenojejunal contractile activity were obtained from 20 freely ambulant subjects; pressure was detected by two strain-gauge sensors incorporated in a transnasal catheter attached to an encoder and a miniature tape recorder. The subjects were 12 patients with irritable bowel syndrome, 6 of whom were constipation predominant and 6 of whom were diarrhea predominant, and 8 healthy controls. The procedure was well tolerated by all subjects and did not interfere with sleep or normal activity. In all subjects, the diurnal migrating motor complex cycle was characterized by a brief phase 1 and a prolonged phase 2; this was reversed during sleep when phase 2 was virtually absent. All subjects showed a circadian variation in migrating motor complex propagation velocity, and there was no difference in the patterns of motor activity during sleep between any of the groups. During the day, the duration of postprandial motor activity was shorter in irritable bowel syndrome patients than in controls, and diurnal migrating motor complex intervals were shorter in diarrhea-predominant than in constipation-predominant irritable bowel syndrome. In 11 of 12 inflammatory bowel syndrome patients, episodes of clustered contractions recurring at 0.9-min intervals were noted; these episodes had a mean duration of 46 min and were often associated with transient abdominal pain and discomfort. In both groups of irritable bowel syndrome patients, defecation was significantly (p less than 0.01) prolonged with a greater number of voluntary abdominal contractions (p less than 0.01) than in controls. Prolonged ambulant monitoring of proximal bowel motor activity in subjects who are free to move, eat, and sleep as they choose has, for the first time, clearly defined the striking difference in motility between the sleeping and waking state and shown that abnormalities associated with irritable bowel syndrome are confined to the latter.
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PMID:Prolonged ambulant recordings of small bowel motility demonstrate abnormalities in the irritable bowel syndrome. 232 14


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